Can You Qualify for Benefits If You Aggravate an Old Injury?
You’ve suffered some type of injury that prevents you from working. Maybe it happened at your current job, or maybe it happened before you came to your current employer. Maybe it wasn’t even related to your job—suppose you hurt yourself playing sports when you were younger and you aggravate that injury on the job. Can your employer or the workers’ compensation insurance company attribute your inability to work to the old injury and reject your claim for workers’ comp benefits?
Qualifying for Workers’ Compensation Benefits
In New Jersey, as in all states, there are only two requirements to be eligible for workers’ comp benefits: (1) you must suffer an injury, and (2) the injury must have been sustained during the course of your employment. So how does that apply when you have a documented pre-existing injury? It all comes down to whether the original injury is currently preventing you from currently or “an aggravation” of that prior injury. The simple fact that you were previously injured will not automatically disqualify you from eligibility for workers’ compensation benefits.
Under New Jersey law, employers take employees as they find them, with all pre-existing injuries and illnesses. There is no affirmative duty to inform an employer of a prior injury; if the employer does not ask, the employee is under no duty to disclose a previous injury. But an employee may not misrepresent the occurrence of a prior injury.
An employee will be allowed to recover workers’ compensation benefits only if they can prove that the prior injury was aggravated by their job. If it can be established that the employee never fully recovered from the prior injury, workers’ comp benefits typically will not be available. However, if the employee was cleared by a doctor to return to work and then aggravated the prior injury, benefits typically will be available.
Contact the Cintron Firm
At the Cintron Firm, LLC, we offer more than 14 years of experience to people in New Jersey facing a broad array of legal challenges. Attorney Mark Cintron has worked as a prosecutor and has extensive courtroom experience, so he’s always ready, willing, and able to protect your interests before a judge or jury. Contact our office online, or call us at 201-791-1333 or 917-494-5695 to set up an appointment.